Warner knows Steelers offensive coordinator Todd Haley's system better than anyone. He ran it for two productive seasons, one that ended with a last-minute Super Bowl loss to the Steelers. He knows what makes it go.

Warner believes Roethlisberger can make it as much his offense as Warner did. All he needs is trust, a sense of entitlement and some inquisitiveness.

While Roethlisberger never fully wrapped is arms around Haley's controlled passing offense the way he did Bruce Arians' down-the-field system, he was on pace for his best season until getting hurt nine games in. Neither Roethlisberger nor the Steelers (8-8) were the same again.

“And then we have all these questions: Can the offense work? Well, we saw earlier in the year, from an offensive standpoint and having success, it can definitely work,” said Warner, now an NFL Network analyst. “But just like any offense, you have to have players buy into what you're doing and why you're doing it.”

To Warner, that's where Roethlisberger needs to take a stand: This offense isn't being forced on me; it's my offense.

Unlike a Peyton Manning or an Andrew Luck, Roethlisberger isn't known as one whose handprints are all over the playbook. He will follow the game plan but, at times, prefers to rely on his instincts and improvisational ability.

“He came out at one point and said, ‘It's just a dink-and-dunk offense.' And maybe it is compared to what he had done,” Warner said. “But (he should ask), ‘Why are we doing this? How does this benefit me? How does this play to my strengths? If the offense didn't play to his strengths, I think it would be tough to ever buy in. But I do believe it plays to his strengths.”

Warner said the misconception is Haley's offense — at least his Steelers offense — de-emphasizes the deep throw.

“They can eliminate hits and then they can take chances down the field, which is what Ben is so good at,” Warner said. “(The short passes) eliminate the risk factor of him having to get hit over and over again. Not just the risk factor for Ben but the risk factor for the team that when Ben doesn't play, this team is a different team.”

Warner threw for 3,417 yards despite making only 11 starts in 2007, then went 401 of 598 — yes, almost 600 attempts — for 4,583 yards, 30 touchdowns and 14 interceptions in the 2008 Super Bowl season.

“I think Todd's offense can be a good fit for any quarterback. What I know about Todd is he has the ability to change the way he runs an offense,” Warner said. “When we were together, we threw the ball down the field a lot. But we complemented that with a lot of the short-passing game — and we were limited at our offensive line position.

“It was understood, ‘Hey, we can't just drop back seven steps and try to wing the ball down the field all the time. I think when he went to Pittsburgh, he said the same thing: ‘I can't let Ben get hit this much, he's too important to our football team. So we're going to manage it.' ”

I'll give Warner credit, for his experience,... And forced to "wing" it, .., definitely cost them the SB, when we played them, just ask Harrison -Hahaha.

I agree, Ben HAS to buy into Haley's Offense 100%, for his offense to follow, else his offense won't follow, and it'll be a catastrophy, just like it was the 2nd half of our past season.
I'm certain Ben knows that now, but thanks Kurt, for the next seasons reminder. - note to Ben.

As far as Ben and Peyton Manning being that different?, well, they have been similar this past season in some respects.
Namely, they both threw the game-losing INT's ! ;)
- and that thanfully, is now in the past.

steelfury02

02-03-2013, 08:11 AM

i have faith that Ben is over things a little, is getting some down time as a new father - haha, "down time as a new father" - kinda doesn't exist! - I just think he'll be more aware than ever of what it will take moving forward - especially since he hasn't been this humbled since 06 Season.

The_Joker

02-03-2013, 10:13 AM

Just get the system working or we're ****ed!

Fire Arians

02-03-2013, 02:18 PM

ben was having a career season until he got injured, i've got faith in the system, shit just happens.

FanSince72

02-03-2013, 02:24 PM

I guess Haley's a decent coach, but it's not like he'll ever be Coach of the Year.

BTW, do you know who WAS voted Coach of the Year? :applaudit: :applaudit: :rofl:

(yeah I know...but I just couldn't resist) :sofunny:

lloydwoodson

02-03-2013, 02:34 PM

I guess Haley's a decent coach, but it's not like he'll ever be Coach of the Year.

BTW, do you know who WAS voted Coach of the Year? :applaudit: :applaudit: :rofl:

(yeah I know...but I just couldn't resist) :sofunny:

Yep, now Arians is in the company of some other all-time great coaches who share the same honor like Dick Jauron, Jim Haslett, Wayne Fontes and Marvin Lewis. In the words of Jim Mora (who also won the award) it means "diddly poo."

harrison'samonster

02-03-2013, 03:11 PM

I guess Haley's a decent coach, but it's not like he'll ever be Coach of the Year.

BTW, do you know who WAS voted Coach of the Year? :applaudit: :applaudit: :rofl:

(yeah I know...but I just couldn't resist) :sofunny:

you know, I was waiting for that. And now that it's happened, I'd have to say I would have been disappointed if you hadn't posted that.

harrison'samonster

02-03-2013, 03:12 PM

I think Haley's offense can work, but a vital part to keeping Ben healthy is getting a dangerous RB. If we want Ben to stay healthy, the RB has to be part of the plan.

FanSince72

02-03-2013, 03:43 PM

Yep, now Arians is in the company of some other all-time great coaches who share the same honor like Dick Jauron, Jim Haslett, Wayne Fontes and Marvin Lewis. In the words of Jim Mora (who also won the award) it means "diddly poo."

And one could also say he's in the company of Bill Walsh, Joe Gibbs, Bill Parcells and Bill Belichick.

Whether that means "diddly poo" or "Holy Shit!" remains to be seen, but I'd say that career-wise, BA could have done a lot worse. :noidea:

you know, I was waiting for that. And now that it's happened, I'd have to say I would have been disappointed if you hadn't posted that.

Glad to oblige! :hatsoff:

JVip

02-03-2013, 03:46 PM

Unlike a Peyton Manning or an Andrew Luck, Roethlisberger isn't known as one whose handprints are all over the playbook. He will follow the game plan but, at times, prefers to rely on his instincts and improvisational ability.

I take issue with this statement, does Andrew Luck really compare to Peyton in this aspect? He is a rookie, how are his 'handprints' all over the playbook? This statement seems like a slight toward BB. How does a rookie have more of an impact on the playbook than a seasoned vet?
ALSO
Some of these articles are terrible, learn to use the spell check and proof read your articles. 90% of "sports writers" are hacks.

lloydwoodson

02-03-2013, 03:51 PM

And one could also say he's in the company of Bill Walsh, Joe Gibbs, Bill Parcells and Bill Belichick.

The real question you need to ask yourself: "Is Arians a better football coach than Don Shula or George Halas?"

FanSince72

02-03-2013, 03:59 PM

The real question you need to ask yourself: "Is Arians a better football coach than Don Shula or George Halas?"

And the real answer is: How the fuck would I know? He hasn't been a head coach yet, so how could I possibly be able to answer that?

But I'll say this: if his success with Indy is any example, I'd say he sure as hell has a shot!

fer522

02-03-2013, 04:03 PM

Dude let's not forget that his Qbs were BB and a guy that made everybody forget about Payton in less than a year:noidea:

lloydwoodson

02-03-2013, 05:27 PM

And the real answer is: How the fuck would I know? He hasn't been a head coach yet, so how could I possibly be able to answer that?

But I'll say this: if his success with Indy is any example, I'd say he sure as hell has a shot!

I might be the best quarterback in the NFL too. There is no way to possibly know since I never got my shot.

BKAnthem

02-03-2013, 06:24 PM

It's not like this is Greg Knapp running the offense...Ben needs to grow a brain and think sometimes before he opens his yap

GoFor7

02-03-2013, 08:56 PM

i have faith that Ben is over things a little, is getting some down time as a new father - haha, "down time as a new father" - kinda doesn't exist! - I just think he'll be more aware than ever of what it will take moving forward - especially since he hasn't been this humbled since 06 Season.

You look at what happened this season and think Ben is the one that should be humbled?

Well this is Pittsburgh after all.

"CUT THE QUARTERBACK!"

"SHOOT THE GOALIE!"

El-Gonzo Jackson

02-04-2013, 12:28 PM

I hope Ben listens to what Warner is saying, if he hasnt already. Big things can happen with this offense, but we still need a running game so that its not one dimensional.

The fact that Haley tried to run the ball is what opened things for Heath Miller so much. I hope he comes back healthy and that Paulsen shows us he can be a weapon as a receiver too.

fansince'76

02-04-2013, 12:33 PM

You look at what happened this season and think Ben is the one that should be humbled?

Well this is Pittsburgh after all.

Agreed. Not to mention getting bashed yet again for "having a big mouth" in a thread that features an article in which he doesn't say a damn thing. :coffee: